Reviews

Goodnight Bush by Gan Golan, Erich Origen

lelandbuck's review against another edition

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5.0

What can I say, after 8 years of being embarrassed by our government, I'm going to enjoy every last poke, joke, and jibe.

tommyhousworth's review against another edition

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5.0

OK, I read this, in its brief entirety at the bookstore. It's priceless. Satire at the level of "The Daily Show". Great illustrations, smart references, and a spot on parody of the original "Goodnight, Moon".

Should go nicely in the Bush Library. I mean, the Bush Shelf.
Cubby Hole?

My bias is showing, but if you don't believe we've had the most forthcoming, capable leadership the past eight years, and you can still laugh about it, this is well worth reading or gifting to a Blue-state buddy.

greenogal's review against another edition

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3.0

FUNNY!!

marie_gg's review against another edition

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4.0

Hilarious!!

sebarose's review against another edition

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4.0

Surprisingly scathing for a book of this format. A great book.

steveab's review

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5.0

wonderful, fun, subtle, read.

larsipoo's review

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5.0

HILARIOUS parody of Goodnight Moon, if you dislike/disagree the current administration. Pay attention to the details! Had me laughing out loud - at work! (I work in a bookstore.)

mungo181's review

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2.0

it's kinda depressing.

xterminal's review

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2.0

Erich Origen and Gan Golan, Goodnight Bush (Little, Brown, 2008)

Why, exactly, do I find myself surprised that Goodnight Bush is not a gentle parody of Goodnight Moon, but a whiny book by political activists? Which, in all honesty, I probably would have been amused by were it not for Origen and Golan's afterword, which talks about how nightmarish Goodnight Moon actually is. They're right, of course; when it comes right down to it, kid-friendly media is chock full of stuff that's geared to give kids nightmares. (Watch some of those old Disney movies again through adult eyes.) Goodnight Moon is a little more subtle about it, to be sure, but there's all sorts of odd little quirks in that book that, taken at face value, would make any kid question the validity of reality. What bugs me is not only that Origen and Golan do not see this as a good thing, they feel the need to stretch to “the unquestioning acceptance of the structure of Goodnight Moon has led us straight to the evil fascist dictatorship under which we now live”. (No, that is not a direct quote.) Which would be all well and good if the idea behind the dissociative state that pervades Goodnight Moon were not “you know, you should be questioning this stuff”. The fact that Goodnight Moon was W's favorite kid's book is irrelevant (unless you're Origen and Golan); after all, it was also the favorite kid's book of millions of other kids, most of whom will never get to be president. Pretty small data sample you got there, guys. Perhaps you should have asked yourself, before putting that out there for all the world to laugh at, how many kids whose favorite book was Goodnight Moon grew up to be liberals.

I do have to give it some props for actually being a pretty faithful take on the original, graphics-wise, though they could have done so much more with the Osama who took the place of the mouse. * ½

doitninetimes's review

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4.0

brings out the creep-factor in both reality and the original version of this book. v. enjoyable.
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